Kyle and I have recently been reminded of a pretty good problem to have: We have a ton of gift cards and we have no plan for spending them!

Why We Have So Many Cards

1) I think we might receive more than the average people because I, particularly, am very difficult to buy for. People know that I like to read so they tend to give me gift cards to booksellers (we have a lot to Barnes and Noble!) and Kyle for years received Blockbuster gift cards because he likes video games. We actually bought a video game system a few years ago just using his Blockbuster gift cards, but he still has more! We also live superfar away from all our family and gift cards are easy to mail.

2) We rarely create opportunity to use the cards. Our spending on things since we got married has really fallen off a cliff. We have lots of cards to retailers we don’t ever visit (Walmart) and places that we used to frequent we don’t any longer. I visit the library now and buying books never even crosses my mind!

3) When we do buy something, we forget to check if we have a gift card and we can’t remember because we use them so infrequently. For instance, we bought some luggage at Macy’sa few weeks ago. We didn’t know that we were going to visit that particular retailer that evening and we had forgotten that we had a card there from our wedding gifts.

Proposed New System

I hate to think about those balances declining or expiring completely! This is what I would like to do:

1) Go through the stack and sort into retailers that we will reasonably visit and ones that we will not.

How do you handle gift cards – do you have a lot and do you have a system for dealing with them? What do you think of my proposal? Which online gift card exchange is your favorite and what do you do with cards with small balances?

(reply to Alex and Daisy) I don’t think we’ll regift. There are only about 5 cards with nice round balances. A couple are to B+N, which I could use if I gave it some thought, and the others are to restaurants. I don’t want to presume that anyone else would want to go to those particular chains – after all, I don’t! Kyle wouldn’t mind visiting the restaurants so I think he’ll use them. Two cards that I am determined to sell are to grocery stores – one is a CA chain (given when we were living out there) that we obviously won’t use in the next few years and the other is to a store we have locally but never visit because The Omnivore’s Dilemma turned me against it. 🙂

I don’t get gift cards very often but when I do I make sure to use it within two months…I hate holding on to them. I got a ton of gift cards from my wedding and I created a spreadsheet of how many, how much, and who it was from. Then I went to the stores (I had to return duplicate gifts to Target and Bed Bath & Beyond anyway) and got all the gift cards combined into one gift card so that my wallet wouldn’t be so packed and the number of gift cards doesn’t seem so overwhelming. If you are going to sell yours, it might be a good idea to combine them so you can sell it at one go.Jessica recently posted..Selling Your Wedding Dress Online

I think the problem really started for us when Kyle removed his gift cards from his wallet (my wallet is tiny so I’ve never carried any of mine). Then they were really out of sight, out of mind! That’s a good idea to combine them – I didn’t realize retailers did that.

I have the same system as you…. put em in my wallet and forget about them haha. I have a lot and I even have a Coach gift card because a family member gave me a purse for Christmas so I returned it for store credit, but I don’t think I can get anything there under $100 so I may just end up selling it. The thing with selling gift cards is some people want a little discount with it, like $5-$10! In that case I’d rather just buy something with it and keep it for myself :X

That’s part of the reason we haven’t used some of these cards – I know we’ll end up spending some of our own money because the balances are low for what we would want to buy at those retailers. It looks like the online gift card sellers will give you 70-95% of the balance on the card, but at least for Plastic Jungle they won’t buy if the balance is below $25. I think it’s better to take less money than to never use the card though, as has been happening for so many years already! This is why all our gifts should be cash… 🙂

We don’t really have a system but we get around to using them. We’ve had some gift cards for over a year but they’ll get spent eventually. We use most of the store cards (Walmart or Target) but we definitely have a tough time using up the restaurant cards.Jason recently posted..Things to Consider With Your Relationship and Money

I wish people would never give me gift cards for anywhere but Amazon. I hardly ever go to the store anymore, and most of what I buy comes from there anyway.Eric recently posted..Yakezie Blog Swap – Money and Relationships

This is fascinating! I’ve never really been given a GC to a restaurant chain or grocery store. I’m not big on most chains either, but maybe they’d have good salads…? I’d be interested in your experience with selling back the GC.

We had a few hundred of BB&B credit after the wedding. I only really registered there because my mom’s friends *LOVE* the store, but I ended up taking most the stuff back. haha. We’ve used the money to buy wedding/birthday gifts, etc. since then. So in a sense, it’s “regifting”.

We have a drawer for GCs, coupons, sales reminders, and receipts for things we need to return. (I hate showing up at IKEA/BBB and realizing I left returns stuff at home!!) We really just don’t leave the house without glancing through the stack. Davis is such an organized town – we get coupon books every quarter! There’s always “$3 off Supercuts” or “20% off @ Ace” – so this approach to retailing was an easy habit to start here.

That’s what we did with Macy’s since we registered there for our wedding. Well, we kept all the gifts, just returned duplicates and such. It worked out well as so many other people register there, too, so I think we’ve used all our store credit and just have one card left now. That is a good idea to combine gift cards with coupons and deals and such – same idea and only one place to check!

My wife and I make a game out of spending our gift cards. We’ll drop off the kids at Grandma and Grandpa’s, and then try to have a date entirely out of gift cards. Yes, sometimes you end up at JC Penny’s and some other weird places, but it’s cool to go home at night knowing that you basically didn’t spend a dime!MyMoneyDesign recently posted..Budgeting for the Summer

We immediately regift them, unless it’s someplace we were planning on going right away.

In terms of me being a pain to shop for, what I do is have a substantial Amazon wishlist. Anytime there’s something that I want, instead of buying it, I pop it on the wishlist and at Christmas or my birthday people don’t have to think about what to get me and I get things I wanted. My sister hates it, but everyone else seems happy with the system.Nicoleandmaggie recently posted..Spending for the second baby

I do this for Christmas for my parents and siblings, which is the only time of year I am really expecting gifts. (Sometimes they pop up for birthdays/anniversaries, too, but less frequently.) This was the first year I was able to convince my husband to give his wish list to my family. He has a very different gift-giving philosophy than I do. My family appreciates it.

That’s a good system. Right now I have $35 at Amazon I am saving for a camera purchase. I used to spend gift cards as soon as I got them, but we’ve since “evolved” (look! I used your word!) and really wait to use our cards. We make sure they don’t expire but we now use cards for stuff we were going to buy anyways.American Debt Project recently posted..Would You Invest in Tech Stocks? What Exactly is the “Tech” Industry Anyways?

[…] We have random gift cards that we haven’t gotten around to using because we either never visit those retailers or we forget. We were proactive in this season and put gift cards toward our non-Amazon purchases to reduce our total out-of-pocket spending. (I actually have a $25 Amazon gift card waiting for redemption from my insurance company, but I didn’t remember in time to get it shipped! Darn!) I guess this is a form of regifting, but probably its more innocuous form. […]